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Monday, January 26, 2015

Fearlessness, Ancient Trees, And Giving Blind People Sight With NPR

I've written extensively about my love for public television, but have I ever told you how much I also love public radio? When my family isn't watching PBS, we are listening to NPR. Especially on the weekends, because NPR shines the brightest on the weekends.

More than once Thomas and I have looked at each other and said, "We need a 15 minute detour" when we knew we wouldn't be getting out of the car before the NPR show we were listening to was concluded.

Ancient Trees

Yesterday we spent a lovely hour listening to an interview with the creator of the Archangel Ancient Tree Archive. As soon as they started talking about the organization, I remembered hearing a story about them a year ago. This made Sunday's interview a nice update. A really nice update, actually, because I think I even made a note to write about them a year ago, and never got around to doing it. Today is a good day to fix that.

Fearlessness

My new favorite show on NPR is Invisibilia with Lulu Miller and Alix Spiegel. Last Sunday night was a look at fear and fearlessness. The first half of the show was an introduction to a woman who feels no fear. Because of a rare disease, her body is blocked from producing fear of any kind. The second half of the show dealt with the fear that most of us do feel - and ways we can control it.

I really connected with this second half of the show. There were interesting tidbits like studying the sweat of first-time skydivers to see that there was a fear pheromone in their sweat, a look at why people may find snakes so scary, and how rejection therapy is helping people to overcome fear. But the thing that really spoke to me was the discussion around "executive order" - how people are able to logically talk to themselves and stop fear in the moment. I recognized in the technique much of what it is like to deal with a flashback or panic attack.

Giving Blind People Sight

This was the topic of last night's Invisibilia. Lulu and Alix started with a look at expectations and how they effect the people around us. That alone was interesting. Not a new concept entirely, but an interesting look at it. But the next part of the show was where things really heated up - the interview with "Batman" Daniel Kish who is completely blind, but began navigating the world when he was a small boy by the clicking noises he makes with his tongue. He is well-known for being a blind man who rides a bike, but his story was much deeper than that "trick" moment.

Through clicking, Kish is actually able to form mental pictures of his surroundings. Through testing, scientists were able to see in Daniel Kish and other subjects that the region of the brain that is used for sight was being activated when they used this clicking method. It was interesting to note that one of the men interviewed was able to see until the age of 14, and he said that the kind of seeing he can do now through clicking and echolocation is much the same as seeing before, just a little more blurry and without color.

Kish's is mission is to teach other blind people how to do this, and how to live life with more freedom. It was interesting to hear how his mother raised him without limits that would normally be placed on a blind child (or, in some cases, maybe even a child with sight). He was climbing trees, riding bikes, walking to school across busy roads by himself, and other things at a young age.

This brought the conversation of expectations full circle. At the beginning of the program, the hosts asked people if they believed your expectations of people could affect them, and most of them said yes. They then asked if you could change your expectations of a blind person and help them to see, which got a unanimous no. After the science and personal stories were presented (much more in depth than the overview I gave, and bringing in other interesting people), they asked that second question again, and several people changed their answer.

35 comments:

Wow so much food for thought. Not going to lie, I do my fair share of TV viewing and reading in what little spare time I have, but most is more on the recreational side and probably not learning nearly as much as you have from what you shared above.

I do watch a bit of PBS because we don't have cable. Just over the air channels and streaming networks. I can't remember the last time I listened to NPR though. I have been listening to audio books more lately when I work during the day. Lately I have been listening to Virtual Freedom. How to get more out of your entrepreneurial work day in less time.

Love NPR... We also watch a lot of documentaries around here. They are some of our favorites because regular tv is just filled with you don't need a brain to watch shows. Which isn't to say we don't watch those too but we try to get a little learning in. lol